<
>

Sam Dyson fired up over Jose Bautista bat flip: 'He's doing stuff kids do'

play
Do the antics in the Rangers-Blue Jays game bother you? (1:25)

ESPN's Karl Ravech and Tim Kurkjian react to the wild seventh inning in Game 5 between the Rangers-Blue Jays. (1:25)

Any retribution for crossing the line, for breaking from baseball's long-held traditions of decorum and etiquette, will have to wait.

But Texas Rangers reliever Sam Dyson wasn't waiting to share his thoughts on Jose Bautista's home run celebration -- The Bat Flip Heard 'Round The World -- in Wednesday night's Game 5 American League Division Series clincher for the Toronto Blue Jays.

"I told him Jose needs to calm that down," Dyson said of his comments to Blue Jays designated hitter Edwin Encarnacion in the next at-bat after Bautista's blast, a confrontation that cleared the benches in the seventh inning of Toronto's 6-3 win. "Just kind of respect the game a little more."

The Rangers had taken the lead on a controversial play in the top of the inning. A throw back to the mound by Blue Jays catcher Russell Martin caromed off the bat of the Rangers' Shin-Soo Choo and allowed a run in.

Bautista's dagger then followed in the bottom half of the seventh.

"He's a huge role model for the younger generation that's coming up and playing this game," Dyson said of Bautista. "He's doing stuff that kids do in whiffle ball games and backyard baseball.

"It shouldn't be done."

Bautista said he made the toss almost unconsciously, not realizing what he was doing.

"I can't really remember what was going through my mind, to be quite honest with you," Bautista said. "After I made contact, I just, I didn't plan anything that I did. So I still don't even know how I did it. I just enjoyed the moment, ran around the bases, got to the dugout, and after all the guys stopped punching me and hitting me is when I started realizing what had happened.

"I knew I did something great for the team at the moment of impact because I knew I hit that ball pretty good. And I gave us the lead in a crucial moment, so I was happy to do that."

Joe Carter, who hit the biggest home run in Blue Jays postseason history -- a game-ending, World Series-winning blast in 1993 against the Philadelphia Phillies in Game 6 -- tweeted Thursday that there's nothing wrong with bat flips in the postseason. Carter was responding to a debate over Bautista's flip on ESPN Radio's Mike & Mike program.